Simak, Cliffard D - Auk House
camp out in a couple of rooms for the few months he would be there.
Strange, he reflected, the built-in attraction the house had for him, the
instinctive, spontaneous attraction, the instant knowing that this was the
sort of place he had had in mind. Not knowing until now that it was the
sort of place he had in mind. Old, he told himself
He put the car in gear and moved slowly out into the road, glancing back
over his shoulder at the house. A half mile down the road, at the edge of
what probably was Montfort, although there was no sign to say it was, on
the right-hand side, a lopsided, sagging sign on an old, lopsided shack,
announced Campbell's Realty. Hardly intending to do it, his mind not made
up as yet, he pulled the car off the road and parked in front of the shack.
Inside, a middle-aged man dressed in slacks and turtleneck sat with his
feet propped on a littered desk.
'I dropped in,' said Latimer, 'to inquire about the house down the road.
The one with the brick drive.'
'Oh, that one,' said the man. 'Well, I tell you, stranger, I can't show it
to you now. I'm waiting for someone who wants to look at the Ferguson
place. Tell you what, though. I could give you the key.'
'Could you give me some idea of what the rent would be?'
'Why don't you look at it first. See what you think of it. Get the feel of
it. See if you'd fit into it. If you like it, we can talk. Hard place to
move. Doesn't fit the needs of many people. Too big, for one thing, too
old. I could get you a deal on it.'
The man took his feet off the desk, plopped them on the floor. Rummaging in
a desk drawer, he came up with a key with a tag attached to it and threw it
on the desk top.
'Have a look at it and then come back,' he said. 'This Ferguson business
shouldn't take more than an hour or two.'
'Thank you,' said Latimer, picking up the key.
He parked the car in front of the house and went up the steps. The key
worked easily in the lock and the door swung open on well-oiled hinges. He
came into a hall that ran from front to back, with a staircase ascending to
the second floor and doors opening on either side into ground-floor rooms.
The hall was dim and cool, a place of graciousness.
When he moved along the hall, the floorboards did not creak beneath his
feet as in a house this old he would have thought they might. There was no
shut-up odor, no smell of damp or mildew, no sign of bats or mice.
The door to his right was open, as were all the doors that ran along the
hall. He glanced into the room - a large room, with light from the
westering sun flooding through the windows that stood on either side of a
marble fireplace. Across the hall was a smaller room, with a fireplace in
one corner. A library or a study, he thought. The larger room, undoubtedly,
had been thought of, when the house was built, as a drawing room. Beyond
the larger room, on the right-hand side, he found what might have been a
kitchen with a large brick fireplace that had a utilitarian look to it,
used, perhaps, in the olden days for cooking, and across from it a much
larger room, with another marble fireplace, windows on either side of it
and oblong mirrors set into the wall, an ornate chandelier hanging from the
ceiling. This, he knew, had to be the dining room, the proper setting for
leisurely formal dinners.
He shook his head at what he saw. It was much too grand for him, much
larger, much more elegant than he had thought. If someone wanted to live as
a place like this should be lived in, it would cost a fortune in furniture
Side 2